President Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi will return to Aden city to open the first session of parliament for the internationally recognized Yemeni government since 2015. The al Houthi-Saleh bloc formed a rival parliament in Sana’a in August 2016. Several Yemeni parliamentarians arrived in Aden city on August 2 in preparation for the session. Southern Movement leaders condemned the upcoming meeting as an attempt by the Hadi government to reduce southern Yemeni autonomy.[1]

Suspected Salafi militants attacked a police station used by Emirati-backed al Hizam security forces in Sheikh Othman district in Aden city on August 2. Local sources reported that the Salafi Louay Zamki Bab al Mandab militia conducted the attack to free several detained militants, but the militia denied involvement. Emirati-backed security forces deployed additional units to quell the clashes. Sudan, a member of the Saudi-led coalition, will deploy additional troops to Aden, where armed gunmen frequently attack government and security targets. Southern Yemeni leaders frequently criticize the Hadi government for failing to provide adequate security in southern Yemen.[2]

A spokesman for the Kuwaiti Foreign Ministry denied recent reports that Iran is using Kuwaiti waters to smuggle arms shipments to the al Houthi-Saleh bloc in Yemen on August 2. The spokesman claimed that Kuwait’s territorial waters are under full the control of the Kuwaiti navy and coast guard. Reuters reported on August 1 that the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) transfers weapons components and cash to small boats in Kuwaiti waters in order to bypass the Saudi-led coalition’s naval blockade on Yemen.[3]

ِAl Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) militants attacked Yemeni security forces in Abyan governorate, southern Yemen on August 2. AQAP militants killed and wounded five Yemeni soldiers in Shaqra city in southern Abyan governorate and blew up an Emirati-backed al Hizam security forces police station near Sinaj village in al Mahfid district in northeastern Abyan governorate. AQAP increased its attack tempo in Abyan governorate after the Hadi government deployed additional counterterrorism units to the area.[4]

The Saudi-led coalition is preventing UN humanitarian aid planes from refueling in Sana’a city. A UN official stated that UN aid planes are not able to obtain jet fuel in Sana’a to complete their return flights to Jordan and Djibouti. The Saudi-led coalition, which controls Yemen’s airspace, is preventing the UN from delivering fuel from Aden to Sana’a. The Saudi-led coalition is frequently accused of blocking aid shipments to Yemen, which faces one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.[5]

Horn of Africa Security Brief

China officially opened its first overseas military base in Djibouti on August 1. The Chinese military will base approximately 10,000 troops in Djibouti until 2026. China claims that the base will be used for logistics and counter-piracy operations. China began construction of the base in April 2016 and deployed troops to man it in July 2017. The U.S., France, Italy, and Japan also have military bases in Djibouti.[6]

Al Shabaab militants opened fire on a bus and security vehicle in Witu town, Lamu County, eastern Kenya on August 2. Al Shabaab attacked the vehicles along a major highway connecting Lamu and Tana River Counties. Al Shabaab killed three civilian motorcyclists riding in the vicinity of the attack. Al Shabaab conducts attacks in eastern Kenya in an effort to incite public backlash against Kenya’s military intervention in Somalia.[7]